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The bombing of MOVE: When The Police Dropped a Bomb On Philly Neighborhood in 1985

In 1972, John Africa founded a black liberation group in west Philadelphia called MOVE. Many black people joined the organization and changed their surname to Africa. They shunned all the modern technology and materialism and vowed people to return to the nature.

The first conflict with law enforcement occurred after six years, when policed tried to evict from their house. One police officer was killed and many people were injured from both sides. Nine members were sentenced to a period of hundred years in prison for the murder of the police officer. The group moved to a row house on Osage Avenue in 1981, where they built fortified rooftop bunker and broadcasted their agenda and political lectures with bullhorns at all hours. The members of MOVE also possessed arms illegally. The mayor and police commissioner declared them a terrorist organization.

On morning of May 13, 1985, police raided the houses to arrest four members of the MOVE. The police ordered them to come out peacefully, but the shooting started from the house. In response the police fired ten thousand rounds of ammunition in 90 minutes, but the MOVE did not surrender. The City mayor and State Senator Hardy Williams plead for de-escalation, but the police commissioner, Gregore Sambor, dined and gave the order to bomb the house.

At 5:28 p.m., a satchel bomb composed of FBI-supplied C4 and Tovex TR2, a dynamite substitute, on a 45-second timer was dropped from a state police helicopter, detonating near the fortified pillbox on the roof of the house. The blaze raged out of control, spreading down the block of row houses and hopping the narrow streets. By the time it was extinguished four hours later, 61 houses had been razed. Eleven members of MOVE including the founder John Africa, five adults and five children between the ages of seven were killed.

#1 A Philadelphia police officer watches a block of houses burn. May 13, 1985

#2 A woman cleans her porch while a child in dreadlocks sits on the steps eating lunch.

#3 A unidentified woman living in what Philadelphia police call another MOVE house as police, newsmen and sightseers walk by by homes in the southwest section of Philadelphia.

#4 Lorraine Bond, a lifelong resident of Osage Avenue, and her daughter, Chantee, attend a service at Saint Carthage Church in Philadelphia on May 19, 1985.

#5 MOVE members in front of their original headquarters in the Powelton Village area of Philadelphia.1978

#6 The three blocks destroyed by the fire. May 14, 1985

#7 The fortified MOVE headquarters is hit with a deluge of water by firefighters. May 13, 1985

#8 A man flees for safety with a child while police assault the MOVE headquarters. May 13, 1985

#9 Smoke billows from the spreading fire after the bombing. May 13, 1985

#10 A police officer looks on as the blaze spreads. May 13, 1985

#12 Police officers walk through the destroyed neighborhood the day after the bombing. May 14, 1985

#13 Dozens of houses continue to smolder the day after the bombing. May 14, 1985

#14 Workers remove the remains of a body from the rubble. May 14, 1985

#15 A worker transports the remains of a body found in the rubble.May 15, 1985

#17 Investigators search the rubble for bodies. May 15, 1985

#18 Investigators use a screen to sift through debris. May 16, 1985

#19 A woman mourns after returning to her destroyed neighborhood. May 15, 1985

#20 Mourners stand in front of the former MOVE headquarters as the funeral procession of John Africa passes. Dec. 5, 1985

Written by Benjamin Grayson

Former Bouquet seller now making a go with blogging and graphic designing. I love creating & composing history articles and lists.

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5 Comments

    • Thanks for the info; I checked out Wikipedia for more information. According to eyewitness accounts, it is likely that the officer killed in 1978 was accidentally destroyed by police fire.

      One of the survivors describes how police fired at them as they tried to escape the burning building. Already, the police were violating constitutional rights and murdering children, so I’m not surprised. Taxpayers had to pay millions of dollars to the victims since police were not held accountable.